Pellaea wrightiana

Hooker

Sp. Fil. 2: 142. 1858.

Illustrated
Synonyms: Pellaea ternifolia var. wrightiana (Hooker) A. F. Tryon
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 2.
Revision as of 23:28, 29 July 2020 by imported>Volume Importer
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Stems compact, ascending, stout, 5–10 mm diam.; scales bicolored, linear-subulate, 0.1–0.3 mm wide, centers black, thick, margins brown, thin, erose-dentate. Leaves monomorphic, clustered on stem, 6–40 cm; croziers sparsely villous. Petiole dark-brown, lustrous, flattened or slightly grooved adaxially, without prominent articulation lines. Blade linear-oblong, 2-pinnate proximally, 1.5–5 cm wide; rachis brown throughout, straight, shallowly grooved adaxially, usually glabrous. Pinnae perpendicular to rachis or slightly ascending, not decurrent on rachis, usually with 3–9 ultimate segments; costae straight, 2–20 mm, usually shorter than ultimate segments. Ultimate segments narrowly oblong, 5–20 mm, leathery, glabrous; margins recurved on fertile segments, usually covering less than 1/2 abaxial surface, borders whitish, crenulate; apex mucronate. Veins of ultimate segments obscure. Sporangia long-stalked, containing 64 spores, intermixed with sparse farina-producing glands. 2n = 116.


Phenology: Sporulating summer–fall.
Habitat: Cliffs and rocky slopes, on a variety of acidic to mildly basic substrates
Elevation: 300–2900 m

Distribution

V2 480-distribution-map.gif

Ariz., Colo., N.Mex., N.C., Okla., Tex., Utah, n Mexico

Discussion

W. H. Wagner Jr. (1965) suggested that Pellaea wrightiana was a fertile allotetraploid hybrid between P. truncata (as P. longimucronata) and P. ternifolia. This hypothesis has been confirmed by isozyme analyses (M. D. Windham 1988). Pellaea wrightiana is therefore treated as a distinct species rather than a variety of P. ternifolia. This tetraploid species hybridizes with P. truncata and P. ternifolia subsp. arizonica to produce sterile triploids and tetraploids with intermediate morphology and malformed spores. Pellaea wrightiana has also hybridized with P. atropurpurea to form a rare apogamous pentaploid known only from western Oklahoma.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.

"thick" is not a number.

... more about "Pellaea wrightiana"
mucronate +
Michael D. Windham +
Hooker +
cordate +, truncate +  and rounded +
glabrous +  and pubescent +
linear-oblong +
1.5 cm15 mm <br />0.015 m <br /> (5 cm50 mm <br />0.05 m <br />) +
crenulate +
straight +
Ariz. +, Colo. +, N.Mex. +, N.C. +, Okla. +, Tex. +, Utah +  and n Mexico +
300–2900 m +
yellow +  and white +
obcordate;reniform +
Cliffs and rocky slopes, on a variety of acidic to mildly basic substrates +
monomorphic +
clustered;widely scattered +
recurved +  and reflexed +
noncircinate +  and circinate +
6 cm60 mm <br />0.06 m <br /> (40 cm400 mm <br />0.4 m <br />) +
entire +, erose +  and dentate +
pubescent +  and glabrous +
flattened +
Sporulating summer–fall. +
perpendicular +
not decurrent +
persistent +
linear-subulate +
0.01 cm0.1 mm <br />1.0e-4 m <br /> (?) +  and 0.03 cm0.3 mm <br />3.0e-4 m <br /> (?) +
Illustrated +
brown +  and tan +
cristate +  and tetrahedral-globose +
dark colored +
0.5 cm5 mm <br />0.005 m <br /> (1 cm10 mm <br />0.01 m <br />) +
Pellaea ternifolia var. wrightiana +
Pellaea wrightiana +
species +
0.5 cm5 mm <br />0.005 m <br /> (2 cm20 mm <br />0.02 m <br />) +
crescent--shaped +  and roundish +
branched +  and anastomosing +